Kategorier: Alla - news - stories - techniques - structures

av Vanessa Torres för 6 årar sedan

166

Story structures

Different methods exist to structure stories in journalism, each suited to various types of news and reader engagement. The inverted pyramid begins with the most critical information, ensuring readers get the essential facts quickly, making it particularly effective for hard news.

Story structures

Story structures

Hourglass structure

Hard news
Useful in crime or disaster stories
Then contains chronological storytelling for a part or the rest of the story.
Gives the most important info of news in the top a story.
Can start like the inverted pyramid

Question/answer format

Useful for print and web stories
Helpful way to explain issues like budget increase or any controversial proposal

Inverted pyramid

Soft news
Way to make reader determine if he is interested in the topic
Reader gets crucial info fast
Starts with a summary (Wh-questions)
Then, supporting points go in descending order of importance
The most important information goes at the top of the story

Definition

Way in which news are organized

Sections technique

Useful for investigations or long features
You can organize sections of stories by points of view or time frames
Then, separates them by a large dot or capital letter.
Divides a story into sections (like book chapters)

List technique

Useful when journalists have several points to stress
Then itemize the main points until the ending.
Start with a summary lead or a soft lead and backup leads with quotes or facts.

The Wall Street journal formula

Goes from specific to general
Ending (conclusion with a quote or anecdote)
Development (cause/effect, explanations, points of view)
Next, goes supporting points
Then a focus graph (gives the main topic of a story)
Starts with a soft lead, focusing on a person, scene or event